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 Latin music has  always been a fixture in American popular culture, but its  history reflects centuries of change and complexity from diverse sources.  Roots of Rhythm, an incredible three-hour film originally shown on PBS in 1997, traces the development of this exciting musical genre, going back  500 years across three continents. Hosted by the famed Caribbean American  entertainer Harry Belafonte, the film begins in West Africa, in the villages  that ring with the ancestral anthems of sacred Yoruba beats and bata drums. The  focus shifts to Spain, where modern-day troubadours sing their haunting,  Moorish-tinged ballads and Gypsies dance their heated flamenco dances. Those  musical influences are brought together by the transatlantic slave trade in the  island of Cuba, where enslaved Africans and Spanish immigrants mixed and  melded each others' music into a myriad of new, hybrid creations like the  rumba, tumba francesa, danzon, and mambo. Belafonte quotes a poet who  said, "Cuban music is a love affair between the African drum and the  Spanish guitar."
   In America, this love affair bloomed in New York, where Cuban and African  American jazz musicians like Machito, Mario Bauza, and Dizzy Gillespie melded  mambo rhythms to bebop, creating Latin jazz.  Belafonte then brings us to the  dazzling timbales master Tito Puente and vocalist Celia Cruz, who reigned as the  king and queen of salsa, the stateside version of Cuban dance music that emerged  in the '60s.  The film offers revealing interviews and music clips with many  Latin music stars, including Gloria Estefan of Miami Sound Machine and  Panamanian Rubén Blades. The rare archival footage features Dizzy  Gillespie's 1948 number "Manteca," bandleader Xavier Cugat's "Gypsy Mambo," and  a cartoon clip of Donald Duck doing "Tico Tico." After watching this engaging  and encyclopedic film, you'll never dance to Latin music the same way again.  --Eugene Holley Jr.
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